Tag Archives: search engines

As We May Think

I’d heard of this classic essay by Vannevar Bush (who was apparently unrelated to the later presidents) a few times but never read it until recently. Written in 1945, it summarizes some of the ways in which science helped win World War II (without getting specific about radar or much else, however) and what it will do in the future.

VB seems to predict the desktop computer, a Windows-like operating system (graphical user interface) and Google-type search engines: "Wholly new forms of encyclopedias will appear, ready made with a mesh of associative trails running through them, ready to be dropped into the memex and there amplified." Even digital photography gets a hint or two. It’s long, at twenty-two pages, and the sexism of the day is jarring, but it’s still worth the effort.

Curiosity’s punishment

Sometimes I wish the Internet wasn’t quite so comprehensive. Even the most private people often wind up baring their souls in its electronic pages. Of course it helps not to be too curious, though that is sometimes hard to do. As we grow old, they say, the present recedes while the past marches forward. Thus a little curiosity, abetted by a search engine exploration on the name of an old girlfriend who ditched me for another guy many years ago, turned up the good news that they were still married, but the sad news that they had lost their only child. Clearly, curiosity punishes as well as rewards. I’m now haunted by their tragedy, knowing more than I really wanted to.

Rare readers

Welcome. Rare, indeed. My hit counter has dwindled to pathetic. Live by the search engines, die by the search engines, I guess. Oh, well, I have yard work to do, and other things. Enjoy what’s here, RR.